State Ex Rel. Herr v. Laxalt

441 P.2d 687, 84 Nev. 382, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 369
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1968
Docket5568
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 441 P.2d 687 (State Ex Rel. Herr v. Laxalt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Herr v. Laxalt, 441 P.2d 687, 84 Nev. 382, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 369 (Neb. 1968).

Opinion

*383 OPINION

By the Court,

Mowbray, J.:

This is a proceeding in mandamus brought for the purpose of testing the constitutionality of the reapportionment statute enacted by the Nevada Legislature in 1965 pursuant to the order of the United States District Court for the District of Nevada. 1

In compliance with the federal court order, the Nevada Legislature in special session provided for the election of both houses from districts fashioned according to population. This especially affected the Senate, which up to that time had consisted of one member from each county. The reapportionment act 2 therefore provided that the term of every incumbent Senator should expire on the day following the general election in 1966, provided for the election of an entire new Senate in that year, and further provided for the allotment of 2- and 4-year terms as set forth in the margin. 3 This act was approved in toto by the federal court. 4

*384 Petitioners were elected to the Senate in 1966, 5 drew 2-year terms, and served through the 1967 regular session and the 1968 special session. At the close of the latter, faced with the prospect of another campaign, petitioners asked this court to order the respondents to issue them new certificates of election running from 1966 through the general election of 1970, on the ground that the true length of their terms is fixed by the Constitution at 4 years.

Counsel have briefed and argued collaterally the complex questions arising from (1) petitioners’ failure to protest earlier the statutory provision for 2-year terms and (2) the tacit approval of this provision by the federal court; but both sides have invited this court to reach directly the constitutional question. Because of its importance and possible effect on future apportionments of the Nevada Legislature, we have chosen to do so. We therefore intimate no opinion concerning the possible effect of either of the factors mentioned in this paragraph upon petitioners’ rights.

Petitioners have taken as their fundamental premise that article 17 of the Constitution must be disregarded in ascertaining the proper length of senatorial terms. This is so, they contend, because it is designated “Schedule” in the Constitution and because a member of the Constitutional Convention 6 said that, “merely temporary matters, which * * * are not intended to be permanent features of the instrument, should have their place in the Schedule.” To this effect, they have cited a line of authorities beginning with the Richmond Mayoralty Case, 19 Gratt. 673, 712 (Va. 1870).

We note, however, (1) that these authorities construe constitutions in which the entire Schedule is preceded by an introductory clause, “That no inconvenience may arise [from the particular transition] * * * it is hereby declared that” 7 or words of like effect, and (2) that the earliest of these decisions dates from 1870, 6 years after the adoption of the Nevada Constitution. The usage prior to 1864 was highly variable. The oldest constitutions now in force, those of Massachusetts (1780) and New Hampshire (1784), have no Schedules. The Constitution of California, adopted in 1849, had a Schedule (not numbered as an article of the Constitution), but it contained no such introductory clause as that quoted above. Such *385 a clause was used in section 3, where it apparently referred only to the carrying-over of public officers. The Constitution of Ohio, as revised in 1851, had a Schedule (likewise not numbered as an article), but contained no such clause introductory either to the entire Schedule or to any section.

In the Constitution of Nevada, such a clause is contained in article 17 within section 1, which otherwise refers to the continuation of law suits. Whether or not we attach controlling importance to the placement of this clause, it is clear that there was no settled practice, let alone judicial interpretation, as to the use or effect of a Schedule to be read into its adoption.

Nor do the later decisions predominantly give to a Schedule only temporary effect. In State v. Esser, 115 N.W.2d 505 (Wis. 1962), the court distinguished in the Schedule between sections “of obviously temporary significance” and a section which perpetuated the common law until changed by the legislature. It is significant that the Wisconsin Constitution (1) was adopted in 1848, prior to those of California, Ohio (in the revision cited), and Nevada; (2) numbers the Schedule as an article; and (3) sets forth as the first four sections of the Schedule language identical to the corresponding Nevada sections.

The court further declared: “The general rule is that a provision in the Schedule inconsistent with one embodied in the Constitution itself must yield to the latter.” This is identical in substance to the familiar rule that in construing irreconcilable statutes the later in time prevails. This rule carries as a corollary that the statutes must be reconciled if possible in order to give effect to all the language. Ex parte Smith, 33 Nev. 466, 111 P. 930 (1910).

The Wisconsin Supreme Court quoted its rule from State ex rel. Aquamsi Land Co. v. Hostetter, 79 S.W.2d 463 (Mo. 1934). There, the court did in effect apply the rule and corollary of statutory construction which we have noted. It held that a Schedule provision relating to courts of common pleas was “intended * * * to be read in connection with and as a part of section 1 of article 6 vesting the judicial power of the state.” Id. at 467. This integration was crucial, for only by virtue of it did the common pleas court whose jurisdiction was in question survive the subsequent repeal of the Schedule provision itself.

We are not called upon in this case to give continuing vitality to a repealed provision, but we do conclude that the Schedule of the Nevada Constitution, article 17, has continuing vitality *386 as a part of the Constitution, insofar as its provisions may still be made applicable.

The Constitution of Nevada, therefore, contains three sections which bear directly upon the length of senatorial terms. 8 Section 4 of article 4 is clearly the general rule. Section 9 of article 17 applies equally clearly to a single instance, the allotment of the terms of the Senators first elected under the Constitution. The dispute, therefore, centers on section 10 of article 17.

The familiar rule already noted, that effect must be given to every part of the instrument, has often been applied by this court to the Constitution of Nevada. Youngs v. Hall, 9 Nev. 212 (1874); State ex rel. Aude v. Kinkead, 14 Nev. 117 (1879); Marshall v. Warden, 83 Nev.

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Heller v. Give Nevada A Raise, Inc.
96 P.3d 732 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2004)
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497 P.2d 1364 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
441 P.2d 687, 84 Nev. 382, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-herr-v-laxalt-nev-1968.